![]() The average player ratings were down across the board compared to last year which could indicate a slight game-wide recalibration but the numbers are indicative of how the teams stack up from top to bottom. It’s on you to hit us here or on Twitter with the decisions you think the 2K developers nailed – and where they struck out.īelow the team-by-team grid, we’ve broken down additional trends, so scroll liberally. We’ve rounded up and sifted through the team-by-team overall rating data below. The game is geared toward next season, after all. Without so much as a 2020 offseason, let alone a rookie draft, the rosters themselves in the launch version of NBA 2K21 are in line with where they were in the most recently updated patch of NBA 2K20 but discrepancies among the ratings still exist. This year’s version of the game faced unusual circumstances as the 2020-21 version of the game is technically dropping before the conclusion of the previous campaign. So again, take this with a grain of salt.It’s that time of year again, when hoopers and basketball fans alike gather around their consoles to see and pick apart the player ratings doled out in the latest edition of NBA 2K. These ratings also don't account for players who are injured and what their future overall may be after they come back from their injury, just how well they were playing before their injury (John Wall, KD, Klay, for example). I tried applying that for most of the teams that have serious injuries to their player (i.e. Rose is clearly the best suited for the starting PG role, I think its safe to say with his previous injury history he should come off the bench. This list does not account for injuries so a few of the starting lineups I had to mess with what I thought was the best fit for the team. I did all the starters and up to the 12th man if I knew the team well enough. With that said, here is my take for the 2020 nba starters and a few bench and role players for each NBA team. G-Leaguers: 50-63 (reserved for g-league players) Reserves: 64-67 (reserved for players who usually see very little or no minutes) Role Players: 72-75 (reserved for players who get heavy rotation minutes or are reliable starters)īench warmer: 68-71 (for those who come off the bench for a few minutes) Lower tier superstars: 90-93 (reserved from 5th-15thish best players in the league)Īll-Star Starter Players: 87-89 (reserved for budding superstars/2nd and 3rd NBA All Team)Īll-Star Reserve players: 83-86 (reserved for all star reserves/all 3rd nba team)Īll-Star Caliber Players: 80-82 (reserved for those who can be an all-star, can sneak into an nba all 3rd team)Ħth Man: 76-79 (Reserved for 6th man or an above average caliber starter) ![]() Superstars: 94-97 (reserved anywhere from the 1st-5th best player in the league) Generational Players (their peak): 98+ (usually one or two players) So I have been thinking for nba 2k21 if it came out today, what would a fairer rating system look like? I basically broke it down to these categories ![]() Nobody wants to be a 69 and a good player. I feel like with recent games the ratings have been inflated because a lot of current players grew up playing live/2k and having a low rating has a stigma to it. For example, Ron Artest was an all star in 2004 and the defensive player of the year and his overall was only 69. I remember playing old nba live and 2k games like nba live 2005 which had much fairer overalls. I know there's sliders for the progression rate but even then I don't think that helps that much. ![]() Does anyone else feel that the NBA 2k overalls for players are highly infltated? I swear, if I play MyLeaguge, GM or even M圜areer within the first 5 years a bunch of teams will have a couple or more players with overalls of 90 and more. ![]()
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